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Dive into the research topics where Adrienne Morey is active.

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Featured researches published by Adrienne Morey.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

Prediction of Local Recurrence, Distant Metastases, and Death After Breast-Conserving Therapy in Early-Stage Invasive Breast Cancer Using a Five-Biomarker Panel

Ewan K.A. Millar; Peter H. Graham; Sandra A O'Toole; Catriona M. McNeil; Lois Browne; Adrienne Morey; Sarah A. Eggleton; Julia Beretov; Constantine Theocharous; Anne Capp; Elias Nasser; John H. Kearsley; Geoff Delaney; George Papadatos; Chris Fox; Robert L. Sutherland

PURPOSE To determine the clinical utility of intrinsic molecular phenotype after breast-conserving therapy (BCT) with lumpectomy and whole-breast irradiation with or without a cavity boost. PATIENTS AND METHODS Four hundred ninety-eight patients with invasive breast cancer were enrolled into a randomized trial of BCT with or without a tumor bed radiation boost. Tumors were classified by intrinsic molecular phenotype as luminal A or B, HER-2, basal-like, or unclassified using a five-biomarker panel: estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, HER-2, CK5/6, and epidermal growth factor receptor. Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards methodology were used to ascertain relationships to ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR), locoregional recurrence (LRR), distant disease-free survival (DDFS), and death from breast cancer. RESULTS Median follow-up was 84 months. Three hundred ninety-four patients were classified as luminal A, 23 were luminal B, 52 were basal, 13 were HER-2, and 16 were unclassified. There were 24 IBTR (4.8%), 35 LRR (7%), 47 distant metastases (9.4%), and 37 breast cancer deaths (7.4%). The overall 5-year disease-free rates for the whole cohort were: IBTR 97.4%, LRR 95.6%, DDFS 92.9%, and breast cancer-specific death 96.3%. A significant difference was observed for survival between subtypes for LRR (P = .012), DDFS (P = .0035), and breast cancer-specific death (P = .0482), but not for IBTR (P = .346). CONCLUSION The 5-year and 10-year survival rates varied according to molecular subtype. Although this approach provides additional information to predict time to IBTR, LRR, DDFS, and death from breast cancer, its predictive power is less than that of traditional pathologic indices. This information may be useful in discussing outcomes and planning management with patients after BCT.


Gut | 2002

Aberrant p16 INK4A and DPC4 /Smad4 expression in intraductal papillary mucinous tumours of the pancreas is associated with invasive ductal adenocarcinoma

Andrew V. Biankin; Sandra A. Biankin; James G. Kench; Adrienne Morey; Lee Cs; Darren R. Head; Robert P. Eckstein; Thomas B. Hugh; Susan M. Henshall; R. Sutherland

Background and aims: Intraductal papillary mucinous tumours (IPMT) of the pancreas constitute a unique pathological entity with an overall incidence of associated invasive malignancy of 20%. The malignant potential of an individual IPMT cannot be accurately predicted. Preoperative estimation of the risk of associated invasive malignancy with IPMT would be of significant clinical benefit. As aberrations in cell cycle regulatory genes are associated with the progression of precursor pancreatic ductal lesions to invasive adenocarcinoma, we examined expression of key cell cycle regulatory genes in the cyclin D1/retinoblastoma pathway and the transforming growth factor β/Smad4 signalling pathway in a cohort of patients with surgically resected IPMT. Methods: Sections of formalin fixed paraffin embedded pancreatic tissue from a cohort of 18 patients with IPMT were examined using immunohistochemistry for protein expression of cell cycle regulatory genes p16INK4A, p21CIP1, p27KIP1, cyclin D1, pRb, and p53, as well as the cell signalling molecule Smad4. A comparison of expression levels was made between adenoma/borderline IPMT (10 patients) and intraductal papillary mucinous carcinoma (IPMC) (eight patients, four of whom harboured invasive carcinoma). Statistical analysis was performed using the χ2 and Fishers exact tests. Results: Aberrant expression of the proteins examined increased in frequency from adenoma/borderline IPMT to IPMC. Specifically, there was a significantly greater incidence of loss of p16INK4A expression in IPMC: 8/8 lesions (100%) compared with 1/10 (10%) adenoma/borderline IPMT (p<0.001). Similarly, loss of Smad4 expression was associated with IPMC: 3/8 (38%) versus adenoma/borderline IPMT 0/10 (p<0.03). Loss of Smad4 expression within the IPMT was the best marker for the presence of invasive carcinoma (p<0.001). Conclusions: These data indicate that loss of p16INK4A and Smad4 expression occur more frequently in IPMC alone, or with associated invasive carcinoma, compared with adenoma/borderline IPMT. Aberrant protein expression of these cell cycle regulatory genes in IPMT and pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia in the current model of pancreatic cancer progression suggest similarities in their development and may also represent the subsequent risk of invasive carcinoma.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

In Vivo, Nucleoside Reverse-Transcriptase Inhibitors Alter Expression of Both Mitochondrial and Lipid Metabolism Genes in the Absence of Depletion of Mitochondrial DNA

Patrick W. G. Mallon; Patrick Unemori; Rebecca Sedwell; Adrienne Morey; Martina Rafferty; Kenneth M. Williams; Donald J. Chisholm; Katherine Samaras; Sean Emery; Anthony D. Kelleher; David A. Cooper; Andrew Carr

BACKGROUND Nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs), which are used to treat human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, can cause mitochondrial dysfunction and have been associated with lipoatrophy. The effects of this mitochondrial dysfunction on lipid metabolism, at a molecular level in vivo, have not been described. METHODS We examined early changes (by 2 weeks after initiation of therapy) in expression of mitochondrial and nuclear genes in adipose tissue from 20 HIV-negative subjects randomized to receive dual-NRTI therapy (zidovudine/lamivudine or stavudine/lamivudine) for 6 weeks. RESULTS We observed decreased transcription of mitochondrial (mt) RNA without significant depletion of mtDNA. Decreases in mtRNA coincided with simultaneous up-regulation of nuclear genes involved in transcriptional regulation of mtRNA (NRF1 and TFAM) and oxidation of fatty acids (PPARA and LPL), whereas PPARG, which is important for differentiation of adipose tissue, was down-regulated. Many nuclear changes correlated with changes in peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator-1 (PGC1), suggesting a central role for PGC1 in nuclear responses to mitochondrial dysfunction. Expression of peripheral blood monocyte mtRNA also decreased, suggesting that monocytes may be surrogates for NRTI-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in other tissues. CONCLUSIONS Independent of HIV, NRTIs decrease transcription of mtRNA in vivo. The absence of depletion of mtDNA suggests that NRTIs cause mitochondrial dysfunction by means other than through inhibition of DNA polymerase- gamma , whereas disruption of expression of lipid metabolism genes offers an explanation for NRTI-induced lipoatrophy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

DPC4/Smad4 Expression and Outcome in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma

Andrew V. Biankin; Adrienne Morey; C. Soon Lee; James G. Kench; Sandra A. Biankin; Henry C. Hook; Darren R. Head; Thomas B. Hugh; Robert L. Sutherland; Susan M. Henshall

PURPOSE Prognostic indicators in pancreatic cancer (PC) are poorly defined and difficult to quantify preoperatively, hence they may lead to inappropriate patient selection for treatment. We examined the protein expression of key cell-cycle regulatory and cell-signaling molecules that occur at high frequency in PC and assessed their relationship to clinicopathologic parameters, response to operative resection, and outcome. PATIENTS AND METHODS We identified 348 patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and assessed the influence of reported clinicopathologic prognostic factors and the expression of the cell-cycle regulatory genes p21(WAF1/CIP1) (CDKN1A), cyclin D1 (CCND1), p53, and p16(INK4A) (CDKN2) and the cell-signaling molecule DPC4/Smad4 (MADH4) using immunohistochemistry in a subgroup of 129 patients. RESULTS Independent prognostic factors in resected patients were tumor size greater than 45 mm (P =.0015), involvement of surgical margins (P <.0001), and perineural invasion (P =.014). Loss of DPC4/Smad4 expression cosegregated with resectability (P <.0001) and was associated with improved survival after resection (P <.0001), whereas resection did not improve survival in patients whose tumor expressed DPC4/Smad4 (P =.5). Aberrant expression of p21(WAF1/CIP1), cyclin D1, p53, or p16(INK4A) was not associated with a difference in survival. CONCLUSION Tumor size (> 45 mm), resection margin involvement, and perineural invasion were independent prognostic factors. Preoperative assessment of DPC4/Smad4 expression has potential as a prognostic indicator in patients with PC since resection did not benefit those patients whose cancers expressed DPC4/Smad4 and accurate assessment of DPC4/Smad4 expression, unlike tumor size, margin status, and perineural invasion, does not require resection.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2004

Pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia in association with intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms of the pancreas : implications for disease progression and recurrence

Andrew V. Biankin; James G. Kench; Sandra A. Biankin; C. Soon Lee; Adrienne Morey; Floriaan P. Dijkman; Maxwell J. Coleman; Robert L. Sutherland; Susan M. Henshall

The development of pancreatic cancer (PC) several years after curative resection for noninvasive intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) and the presence of PC distant from IPMN suggest that PC may develop independently of the IPMN. Here, we identified pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) lesions, the putative precursors of PC, in the ducts of pancreata resected for IPMN and assessed the frequency of molecular aberrations common to PanIN and PC, within these lesions. The protein expression of p53, p21WAF1/CIP1, cyclin D1, p16INK4A and DPC4/Smad4 were examined by immunohistochemistry in 267 PanIN lesions from a cohort of 23 patients with IPMN. Overexpression of p21WAF1/CIP1 was present in PanIN-1A and -1B lesions and increased in frequency in PanIN-2 and PanIN-3. Overexpression of p53 and cyclin D1, and loss of p16INK4A expression were detected in PanIN-2 and PanIN-3 lesions. Loss of DPC4/Smad4 expression occurred only in the PanIN-3 lesions. PanIN lesions that were more dysplastic than the coincident IPMN were identified in 5 of 12 patients, and 2 of these contained a greater number of aberrations in protein expression than the IPMN. PanIN lesions seen in association with IPMN demonstrate molecular and histologic changes identical to PanIN lesions found in association with PC and, in some cases, are more advanced than the associated IPMN. These data suggest that PanIN lesions found in the ducts of a pancreas with IPMN may be relevant to the development of PC either coincident with IPMN or in the remnant pancreas after curative resection of IPMN.


The Lancet | 2001

Fatal portal hypertension, liver failure, and mitochondrial dysfunction after HIV-1 nucleoside analogue-induced hepatitis and lactic acidaemia

Andrew Carr; Adrienne Morey; Patrick W. G. Mallon; David Williams; David R. Thorburn

Acute hepatitis with lactic acidosis is a life-threatening but reversible toxic effect on mitochondria of HIV-1 nucleoside-analogue treatment. We report fatal portal hypertension, liver failure, and persistent mitochondrial dysfunction in a man aged 65 years with HIV-1 infection who had recovered from nucleoside-analogue-induced acute hepatitis and lactic acidaemia more than 18 months previously. We believe that symptom free patients who receive nucleoside-analogue therapy should have hepatic function constantly monitored, especially those with past or present lactic acidaemia.


Pathology | 2009

Diagnosis of cutaneous melanocytic tumours by four-colour fluorescence in situ hybridisation

Adrienne Morey; Rajmohan Murali; Stanley W. McCarthy; Graham J. Mann; Richard A. Scolyer

Background: Accurate classification of primary melanocytic tumours as benign or malignant is crucial for prognostic prediction and appropriate patient management. Several chromosomal aberrations have been frequently identified in melanomas, but are absent in melanocytic naevi. We performed four‐colour fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) analysis of melanocytic tumours to determine the accuracy of the technique in classifying melanocytic tumours as benign or malignant. Methods: FISH was performed on paraffin‐embedded tissue from 40 histologically unequivocal melanocytic tumours (10 metastatic melanomas, 10 primary melanomas and 20 benign melanocytic naevi) using the product Vysis LSI RREB1/LSI MYB/LSI CCND1/CEP 6 probes (Abbott Molecular Laboratories, USA), which is designed to detect the copy number of the RREB1 (6p25), MYB (6q23), and CCND1 (11q13) genes and FISH positivity is defined by means of a scoring algorithm. Results: FISH distinguished the melanomas and the naevi with a sensitivity of 90% (10/10 primary melanoma cases and 8/10 metastatic melanoma cases, respectively), and a specificity of 95%. The most common abnormalities in the melanomas were increased copies of 11q (70%) and 6p (70%), followed by 6q loss relative to cep6 (50%). Fifteen of the 18 positive melanomas were positive by more than one criterion. Conclusions: The results of this study show that FISH, using a panel of four probes, is a sensitive and specific method of classifying benign and malignant melanocytic tumours. The four‐colour FISH technique has the potential to assist in the stratification of the subgroup of melanocytic tumours which are difficult to classify using conventional histology.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2015

Precision Medicine for Advanced Pancreas Cancer: The Individualized Molecular Pancreatic Cancer Therapy (IMPaCT) Trial

Lorraine A. Chantrill; Adnan Nagrial; Clare Watson; Amber L. Johns; Mona Martyn-Smith; Skye Simpson; Scott Mead; Marc D. Jones; Jaswinder S. Samra; Anthony J. Gill; Nicole Watson; Venessa T. Chin; Jeremy L. Humphris; Angela Chou; Belinda Brown; Adrienne Morey; Marina Pajic; Sean M. Grimmond; David K. Chang; David Thomas; Lucille Sebastian; Katrin Marie Sjoquist; Sonia Yip; Nick Pavlakis; Ray Asghari; Sandra Harvey; Peter Grimison; John Simes; Andrew V. Biankin

Purpose: Personalized medicine strategies using genomic profiling are particularly pertinent for pancreas cancer. The Individualized Molecular Pancreatic Cancer Therapy (IMPaCT) trial was initially designed to exploit results from genome sequencing of pancreatic cancer under the auspices of the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) in Australia. Sequencing revealed small subsets of patients with aberrations in their tumor genome that could be targeted with currently available therapies. Experimental Design: The pilot stage of the IMPaCT trial assessed the feasibility of acquiring suitable tumor specimens for molecular analysis and returning high-quality actionable genomic data within a clinically acceptable timeframe. We screened for three molecular targets: HER2 amplification; KRAS wild-type; and mutations in DNA damage repair pathways (BRCA1, BRCA2, PALB2, ATM). Results: Tumor biopsy and archived tumor samples were collected from 93 patients and 76 were screened. To date 22 candidate cases have been identified: 14 KRAS wild-type, 5 cases of HER2 amplification, 2 mutations in BRCA2, and 1 ATM mutation. Median time from consent to the return of validated results was 21.5 days. An inability to obtain a biopsy or insufficient tumor content in the available specimen were common reasons for patient exclusion from molecular analysis while deteriorating performance status prohibited a number of patients from proceeding in the study. Conclusions: Documenting the feasibility of acquiring and screening biospecimens for actionable molecular targets in real time will aid other groups embarking on similar trials. Key elements include the need to better prescreen patients, screen more patients, and offer more attractive clinical trial options. Clin Cancer Res; 21(9); 2029–37. ©2015 AACR.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2010

Silver In Situ Hybridization (SISH) For Determination of HER2 Gene Status in Breast Carcinoma Comparison With FISH and Assessment of Interobserver Reproducibility

Bettina G. Papouchado; Jonathan Myles; Ricardo V. Lloyd; Mark H. Stoler; Andre M. Oliveira; Erinn Downs-Kelly; Adrienne Morey; Michael Bilous; Ray B. Nagle; Nichole Prescott; Lin Wang; Lidija Dragovich; Abigail McElhinny; Carole Ferrell Garcia; Jim Ranger-Moore; Heather L Free; William C. Powell; Margaret Loftus; James Pettay; Fabien Gaire; Christopher Roberts; Manfred Dietel; Patrick C. Roche; Thomas M. Grogan; Raymond R. Tubbs

The importance of HER2 status in breast cancer management has focused attention on the ability of clinical assays to correctly assign HER2 amplification status. There is no consensus as to the best method for assessing HER2 status. Disadvantages of fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) testing include longer time required for staining and scoring slides, requirements for specialized training and fluorescence microscopy, and loss of the signal due to quenching of the fluorescent dye. Silver-enhanced in situ hybridization (SISH) is a rapid fully automated assay providing permanently stained slides that are interpreted by conventional bright field microscopy which enables pathologists to evaluate slides within the context of tissue morphology. This study evaluates the concordance between SISH and FISH assays in determining the status of HER2 gene amplification in a cohort of 298 primary invasive breast carcinomas. Furthermore, we assessed in detail the variables contributing to interobserver interpretive reproducibility of HER2 SISH among 10 pathologists. HER2 was quantified using the ratio of HER2 to CHR17 signals using the conventional historical interpretation scale and also by the American Society of Clinical Oncology/College of American Pathologists reporting scheme. For SISH status determined by consensus among 10 pathologists, overall concordance between SISH and FISH was identified in 288 of 298 cases (96.6%) using the conventional Food and Drug Administration approved criteria. Overall agreement was observed in 282 of 285 cases (98.9%) using the American Society of Clinical Oncology/College of American Pathologists result reporting scheme (with equivocal cases removed). In conclusion, SISH represents a novel approach for the determination of HER2 status in breast cancer. The overall concordance between SISH and FISH is excellent, and the interpretation of SISH results by pathologists is most reproducible using the HER2/CHR17 ratio.


The Journal of Pathology | 2014

Metastatic progression of breast cancer: insights from 50 years of autopsies

Margaret C. Cummings; Peter T. Simpson; Lynne Reid; Janani Jayanthan; Joanna Skerman; Sarah Xianyuan Song; Amy E. McCart Reed; Jamie R. Kutasovic; Adrienne Morey; Louise Marquart; Peter O'Rourke; Sunil R. Lakhani

There remain no clear guidelines for the optimal management of patients with metastatic breast cancer. To better understand its natural history, we undertook a detailed examination of 197 autopsies performed on women who died of breast cancer. We reviewed clinical, treatment and pathological aspects of all cases and, additionally, pathological features and biomarker expression (ER, PgR, HER2, EGFR, p53, Ki67, c‐Kit, CK AE1/AE3) were assessed in detail for the primary tumour and matched metastases for 55 of the cases. Genomes of the primary tumour and multiple metastases were analysed by array‐based comparative genomic hybridization for six cases##. 945 metastatic deposits were identified, with a median of four/patient. The most common organs involved were lung/pleura (80%), bone (74%), liver (71%) and non‐axillary lymph nodes (55%). Major findings included: (a) patients with CNS metastases were more likely to have bone metastases (p < 0.013); (b) younger age was associated with metastasis to the liver (≤ 49 years; p < 0.001) and to gynaecological organs (≤ 49 years; p = 0.001); (c) surgical excision of the primary tumour was associated with metastasis to the liver (p = 0.002); and (d) ER and PgR showed down‐regulation during progression in a non‐random manner, particularly in lung/pleura (ER; p < 0.001), liver and bone metastases. Genomic analysis revealed DNA copy number variation between the primary tumour and metastases (e.g. amplification of 2q11.2–q12.1 and 10q22.2–q22.3) but little variation between metastases from the same patient. In summary, the association of CNS and bone metastases, liver and gynaecological metastases in young women and the risk of liver metastases following surgery have important implications for the management of patients with breast cancer. Clonal heterogeneity of the primary tumour is important in developing metastatic propensity and the change in tumour phenotype during progression/colonization highlights the importance of sampling metastatic disease for optimal treatment strategies.

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Robert L. Sutherland

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Susan M. Henshall

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Elizabeth A. Musgrove

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Stephen B. Fox

Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre

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Sandra A O'Toole

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Anthony J. Gill

Kolling Institute of Medical Research

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Catriona M. McNeil

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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James G. Kench

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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